I think the experiment is a success! My hypothesis is that this approach represents more effort than a text-based post, but as a visual learner, I felt the information was distilled effectively. Look forward to the evolution of this format! Thank you.

This is much easier to follow, but takes considerably more time than reading the material. I suspect for me, I would look at these less often but would pay more attention when something challenging was happening with the weather (such as the July troughs you're discussing).

I agree with some of the previous comments. I often look at the charts etc. However the voice over adds some details. Maybe enhance the old formats with a voice and picture summary especially of key details, sort of add emphasis.

Like it, but would hate to see it totally replace the text. Takes much longer to get the gist, but provides easier-to-absorb detail in exchange. When we get into particularly exciting weather patterns, these would be great.

I like it. Your explanations are clearer for me to hear than to read, and it's easier to just see the graphics, instead of having to chase them down on my phone (which often requires getting kicked out & restarting several times per blog post.) Thanks for trying this!

Enjoyed hearing you give more detail and seeing some of the resources you use to make your forecasts. I agree that the written blog posts are great for many updates but appreciated hearing you dive a bit deeper with the video.

I think this is an excellent addition to your blog Cliff!! You interpreted the maps in ways that I learned something new that is a bit less approachable in the typical blog format. Plus you have one of the best speaking voices out there!

I also like it, but second the date overlay idea. I lose track of what day you are discussing when I get wrapped up in the graphs. You have such a nice presentation style and obvious enthusiasm for your subject! Thanks

Thanks Cliff. your presentation gives us more detailed information and a better perspective than the more summary-like reading material. the question is whether your followers want a quick summary or a fully developed analysis. my vote is for the fully developed analysis because we can put subsequent updates in perspective.

I like the explanation given verbally - clearer and easier to understand. I like seeing the websites you use, too. Not sure if this is possible, but you might want to use a larger/colorful mouse arrow. That would be even easier to see where you are pointing. I would keep watching these, so I hope you continue in this format.

This is fabulous! I love hearing your voice and the methodical approach for describing the forecast. In that you are able to describe the moving patterns it has enhanced my understanding. Please keep it up!

I like this a lot; your voice is so pleasant to listen to. It's also easy for frequent YouTube viewers to find this in the subscriptions. I typically look for posts in my Twitter feed but those are often overlooked; I don't keep a tab open for the blog and fell out of the habit of checking a bookmark daily.

I like it! I learned some things and it is informative to hear you talk about what you look at, and why. Sure, your written material does too; but your voice imparts something the written word can't do so well. Kinda like hearing a song rather than just reading the sheet music!

Personally I would prefer an article that I can scan through for just the data and the trend. saves everyone time and is capable of delivering a more personally adjustable rate of information intake. No pausing to go back and re-listen, sped up, slow down, get to the point etc.

This is great! As a pilot of small airplanes in the local Seattle area, I go over various weather products every evening in preparation for the following day. I would love to add this to my evening routine!

Thank you Cliff. As a novice, I appreciate the pointer locating verbal messages and find this format much more informative than reading and trying to match the verbiage with the uisually provided graphics.

I think video presentations would be great once in awhile. Maybe bigger interesting events like this. Like your access to the European. But it’s all to reminisce to your first 5 minutes of lecture for anyone who has taken your 101 class. And in most situations, it’s more convenient to read text than watch video. Having said that, do what is also convenient for you too.

As someone who makes their living by the weather I appreciate this format. You talk about wet July’s check back to the summer of 83. Wrecked a lot of hay that year. Always look forward to your posts no matter what the method.

I generally prefer reading over watching video. Reading allows me to scan quickly and read in depth when I want. Video requires me too sit and watch for a set time. Your written blog is marvelous. I would be sad if you change to video.

A very good post. It was difficult to view the detail on the charts, especially the curser, because I use my phone. I woukd probably skip the post and not return to it, if I wasn't able to turn up the volume on first notice.

Good and helpful video. HOWEVER, not helpful much of the time because it takes longer to get the valuable info you provide and I often am in situations where it isn't practical to view/listen video material.

Consider two options? Post the video but also post the script/graphics in text form as many news sites so. Or, use the tool of video to dive deep on a challenging subject that benefits from your obvious skills at explaining stuff visually and verbally.

Definitely prefer the written version. Your "on the air" delivery is excellent, but the written version provides better nitty-gritty detail and in-depth explanations of the "why" and "how" - these are the reasons I visit your blog.

I've been a follower of your blog for years and like that you give us detailed weather facts for the NW, which we don't get from the major networks! I also watch Mr. Bastardi on WeatherBELL.com too, but again he focuses on more east coast weather patterns.

Maybe just have a Saturday summary video for us that did like the video format and do a text blog during the week for those that like to read, a win/win!

I enjoyed the video and generally agree with the previous comments; don't displace the traditional blog post.

Technical feedback: set the browser to fullscreen mode (usually F11) to declutter the view and maximize usable screen space. A larger or higher-visibility cursor would be a good addition to make it easier to follow.

If there's a lot of demand (and/or to aid in search engine optimization), audio transcription is available for as low as $0.10/min. The more expensive services tend to be more accurate.

Really enjoy your blog and your book. I agree with Weatherman that a once a week summary video with periodic text updates would be great. By watching the video, I now know what to look for in the next few weeks text blogs.

Excellent presentation technique on the video with just the correct level of detail.

I read your blog often, but as an amateur, I often don't completely know what I am looking at in weather images. So, getting your narration with the cursor pointing to what your are referencing really helped orient me and will help me in future reads. Thank you for everything you do! Your passion is inspiring.

The video blog was helpful in seeing weather system progression for the week ahead. It was also very helpful because I could see the actual website and settings you were using to get the charts. For an amateur like me this was great. The UW Weather website often confuses me with too many options to feel confident. But watching you select and navigate that site now gives me a starting point to explore and reproduce what you showed.

Now the downside. It was kind of tiny on my laptop screen and terrible on a cellphone. But a bigger caveat is that folks with limited bandwidth (like my friends in Rockport) that depend on your blog will be unable to watch the video. The solution would be to include a text version for those that are in rural, limited bandwidth areas.

Cliff, As a sailor glued to wx info, I really appreciate your text blog - THANK YOU! The video is difficult to receive on the phone where so much of Western Washington has marginal cell coverage due to distances and topography. Please keep the text blog coming.

For me it was really well done and fun to follow along. I agree with need for bigger cursor arrow if possible and maybe a bit shorter in time. Also to not abandon the written blog posts. My experience is that those are not easy to do and take some time to do well and, if they are not, then people stop watching them. So I hope you can continue to have the time to do them well.

The video has good and bad. It's a different audience that will spend 7 minutes watching a video vs. being able to scan the amount of detail they want on a text page. The video definitely gives you time to add detail. That's good.I recommend a combination approach where you continue with text pages and supplement with video.There are issues, though. Attention span is a big one. Even today I got interrupted before I could finish 7 minutes. I had trouble following the points because "next 24 hours" followed by "next 24 hours" quickly lost me. The screen details are not readable so I can't extract the extra information I enjoy on your pages. Finally, these videos won't be discoverable with a web search. I recently found some of your older commentaries that way.Thank you for the community service you provide, Cliff.

I like both formats, but I think the video works great for me because it is slower and gives me more time look at the graphics and follow along with you as you interpret them. I am a science teacher, but meterology is not my field of study. I am deeply curious about it so the slower approach gives me a better understanding. Does it take longer or more effort for you to create the video? Also, the video would be easier to share with students (say in middle school or high school) if you wanted to broaden your audience.

WOW!!! At last, a multi-year (decades) long mystery finally solved!! Bugging me for forever from the time I first started following you 'til now, was me trying to figure out what "cin" meant at the far right end of that estimated rainfall bar at the bottom of all those forecast rainfall maps. Between your written narratives and looking at those rainfall forecast maps with their color codes, the best I could surmise, especially by the time we got to the blue-green-pink-black-red-and beyond colors implied significant amounts of precipitation increasing incrementally but in units I couldn't quite determine. I've spent years trying to figure out what "cin" meant coming up with all sorts of possibilities that made no sense at all and of course all wrong. THANK YOU Cliff for finally spitting it out, maybe inadvertently, verbally in the first 30 seconds when discussing the first map in the video presentation. Those color coded numbers in that rainfall bar represent "hundredths of an inch", the "c" in "cin" is the roman numeral representing "hundred". Phew, finally I can die now happy. You gotta cut me a little bit of slack here for my inability to make sense of it all. In fact the very notion of using "cin" seems a bit lame and lazy by simply jamming a roman numeral (incorrectly lower case I might add) before an abbreviation for "inch" (in) does seem to be a bit of a stretch even for a shortcut for the average lay person such as myself to figure out. Like so many others, I very much liked the video presentation but also like and appreciate the written narrative as well as with the latter I can study and digest it in detail at my own speed, perhaps at greater speed now that I know the exact meaning of "cin". Maybe both video and written narrative?

I prefer the written version because the narrated version takes much more time, and when it is written, I can glance back to reread something I missed or that was not clear. I do like the animated maps, though.

But seriously, excellent video and an elegant presentation. I'm only too happy to watch for 7 minutes when it's so clearly and informatively laid out. Some things take time to understand, and it's tough to deal with folks who just want to look at icons to get their weather.

I like your presentation. The graphics worked wells to make your points and were very understandable. It was easy to see week-long trends that enable those of us dependent on weather, to make our plans accordingly.

Been a follower of yours for years Dr. Mass and your voice is a radio classic. Definitely love the video version and I think you might consider several options including a written blog to support the video with more detail or use the video option for posts that have more significance to you and potentially your readers, e.g., Hurricane Barry and how does the amount of precipitation relate to climate change.

I'll try to watch it later, but in general I'm opposed to vlogs. I usually catch up on my rss feeds first thing in the morning, and last thing before I go to sleep, and during neither time can I watch videos without disrupting my wife. Same in the office, I can read, but a video disturbs everyone around me.

The video was great, good pace and your narration was excellent. The length didn't bother me - my life isn't so rigidly structured that I can't take 5+ minutes to listen to valuable information. But I would agree that the video and an in depth interpretation of data be an occasional treat to your blog, maybe when there is such an anomaly as our current July weather or something approaching that people need to prepare for. Your written reports and accompanying graphs and data are also excellent and that way the busy folks who can't listen to a 7 minute video can take their time reading, reviewing, studying and pondering your blog and accompanying data��

Your blog always is insightful and much appreciated by this fairly new resident of northwest Oregon. I do prefer the written form, as it allows me to scan through it and get the essentials more quickly, but an occasional video blog would work for me. Thanks for your hard work!

The video was great and super informative. I use your blog often when sailing, as I am now at the north end of Vancouver island. Looks like I’m going to be getting wet!

My only concern is that video uses more bandwidth than text, and cellular data connections can be sparse and slow when away from metropolitan areas. The same concerns apply for those traveling by RV or camping.

I like it. Maybe make the cursor bigger, and don't move it except when it is highlighting something, otherwise it is distracting. A quick agenda at the beginning and in the youtube link would would be good for reviewing and archival purposes.

This was easy to follow as you narrated the weather patterns and effects of it. My husband and I both enjoyed it. With a narration you don't have to look back and forth from the written copy to the graphs and charts. We also enjoy your written blogs. Both work for us.

I join those who prefer the text format for all the reasons they mention. I recently listened to Cliff on the weather feature he has on KNKX. The interviewer mentioned a joke there is about Seattle weather and Cliff responded with another one. Both were very short words and it was impossible for me to figure out what they said. Cliff has a good broadcasting voice but his great blog will not benefit from it, quite the opposite I'm afraid.

Loved it. Came it feeling as though I learned much more than just the forecast. Like I gained an understanding of the more technical aspects which when presented in one of your written posts may go over my head! Thanks for all your work.

Great video! Worked well in a Chrome browser on windows 10 desktop with large screen. Voice quality was very good. Editing was good. That said... including the text would be a bonus! Seems like a wet period ahead. Thanks.

I loved this! The graphics combined with the narration really made this an enjoyable experience. I think this should be a regular part of your blog. I've been following this for years and have purchased your book and have just about worn the print off the page.

I enjoyed the video delivery, but I'm in the camp of preferring the excellent written reports. If you enjoy the video, you should definitely keep doing it to supplement (not replace) your excellent written posts. Keep up the good work!